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Updated 02 Aug, 2014 06:35am

World should draw lessons from WWI, says Putin

MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin on Friday slammed political ambitions that he said threatened peace in Europe as he paid tribute to Russian soldiers who died during World War I.

In a deeply symbolic speech mixing the past with the present, the Russian leader said the 1914-1918 war should be seen as a cautionary tale.

“It serves as a reminder of what aggression and selfishness, exorbitant ambitions of heads of state and political elites prevailing over common sense can lead to,” Putin said as he unveiled a monument to the slain troops.

Those ambitions, he added, put “the world’s most trouble-free continent — Europe” in danger instead of preserving peace.


Know more: Obama, Putin discuss Ukraine in phone call


Putin’s televised comments came with Russia and the West locked in a fierce tug-of-war over the fate of ex-Soviet Ukraine, where pro-Kremlin separatists in the east are fighting against Kiev’s rule.

The Russian leader, who was flanked by the head of the Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill and top officials, said history proved time and again that an “unwillingness to listen to each other” and respect each other’s interests can have huge costs.

He said Russia had always sought peace but would repel any outside attack.

“Violence breeds violence,” Putin said.

On the eve of World War I, “Russia did its best to persuade Europe to solve the conflict between Serbia and Austria-Hungary peacefully, without blood”.

Published in Dawn, August 2nd, 2014

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